Wilderness

Part of the 'Lullabies of Broadmoor' sequence* which also includes 'Venus at Broadmoor', 'The Murder Club' and 'The Demon Box'.

* All four plays can be staged and seen separately.

William Chester Minor (1834 - 1920) served as a surgeon in the U.S. Union Army during the American Civil War. Terrible experiences there weakened an already fragile mind and the Army pensioned him off. He came to live in London where he walked out of his lodgings in Lambeth on 17th February 1872 and shot a complete stranger dead. The man was George Merrett, a furnace stoker at the local brewery. Minor was imprisoned in Broadmoor for the next thirty-eight years. While there he became deeply involved in the writing of the Oxford English Dictionary. Eliza, the widow of his murder victim visited him for a number of years and, although illiterate herself, brought him books from London for his Dictionary work.

'Wilderness' was the first co - production between the Stepping Out Theatre Company and leading local company Theatre West. A second production of the play with a different cast toured to the Finborough Theatre in 2004 as part of a double bill entitled 'Lullabies of Broadmoor'.

The complete text of this play featured in the Summer 2003 issue of 'Plays International' magazine along with photos by Ian Wilmot.

A video of this production in a special souvenir case is available from Stepping Out Theatre Company priced at £10 (includes package and posting).

Reviews

"Powerfully performed, in Catriona McLaughlin's absorbing and atmospheric production . . The result is a piquant mix of witty Gothic ghoulishness and serious moral questioning" Paul Taylor, The Independent